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Source: Journal Citation ReportsTM from ClarivateTM 2022

Entrepreneurship and Sustainability Issues Open access
Journal Impact FactorTM (2022) 1.7
Journal Citation IndicatorTM (2022) 0.42
Received: 2019-10-20  |  Accepted: 2020-02-20  |  Published: 2020-06-30

Title

The critically thinking employee: employers' point of view


Abstract

Critical thinking is one of the most significant skills and abilities, which have direct impact on individual success and society’s welfare. Especially loud is the voice of employers drawing attention to the need for critical thinking skills in the labour market and in a rapidly changing world in general. The World Economic Forum (2018) indicated the ten most wanted and needed skills in the labour market of 2020: critical thinking was placed at number two, following problem solving at number one. The American Management Association (AMA) Critical Skills Survey (2010, 2012) revealed that, according to employers, employees need to think critically, solve problems, innovate, collaborate, and communicate more effectively – they must excel at the “four Cs”: critical thinking, communication, collaboration, and creativity. The goal of this article is to find out what and how employers with different managerial experience see critically thinking employees in today’s labour market. The research is based on phenomenography methodology and is the first such type of research about critical thinking in Lithuania. The phenomenography study revealed three hierarchically interconnected categories: A- decision to act here and now; B- verified and assured decision to act. C- innovative decisions for operational improvement. Empirical data allows identifying critical thinking related expectations of employers who anticipate that their employees could deal with emerging situations and are able to reason chosen decisions. Employers state that the critically thinking employee could give innovative suggestions; research participants describe critical thinking as higher order reasoning which gives added value to an organisation. Such understanding reflects the definition of critical thinking as a cognitive endeavour, directed to functionality in making decisions and solving particular problems. Employees’ critical thinking manifests at personal, interpersonal and societal levels.


Keywords

critical thinking, critically thinking employee, employer


JEL classifications

J24


URI

http://jssidoi.org/jesi/article/541


DOI


Pages

2590-2603


Funding

This research project has received funding from European Social Fund (project No [09.3.3-LMT-K-712-01-0068]) under a grant agreement with the Research Council of Lithuania (LMTLT).

This is an open access issue and all published articles are licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Authors

Indrašienė, Valdonė
Mykolas Romeris University, Vilnius, Lithuania https://www.mruni.eu
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Jegelevičienė, Violeta
Mykolas Romeris University, Vilnius, Lithuania https://www.mruni.eu
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Merfeldaitė, Odeta
Mykolas Romeris University, Vilnius, Lithuania https://www.mruni.eu
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Penkauskienė, Daiva
Mykolas Romeris University, Vilnius, Lithuania https://www.mruni.eu
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Pivorienė, Jolanta
Mykolas Romeris University, Vilnius, Lithuania https://www.mruni.eu
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Railienė, Asta
Mykolas Romeris University, Vilnius, Lithuania https://www.mruni.eu
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Sadauskas, Justinas
Mykolas Romeris University, Vilnius, Lithuania https://www.mruni.eu
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Valavičienė, Natalija
Mykolas Romeris University, Vilnius, Lithuania https://www.mruni.eu
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Journal title

Entrepreneurship and Sustainability Issues

Volume

7


Number

4


Issue date

June 2020


Issue DOI


ISSN

ISSN 2345-0282 (online)


Publisher

VšĮ Entrepreneurship and Sustainability Center, Vilnius, Lithuania

Cited

Google Scholar

Article views & downloads

HTML views: 3662  |  PDF downloads: 1592

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